the city, enjoying the blessings of peace. Bands
of music and merry-go-rounds in all the open places
and squares; open-air bakeries of pancakes and waffles;
theatrical exhibitions, raree-shows, jugglers, and
mountebanks at every corner—all these phenomena
which had been at every kermis for centuries, and were
to repeat themselves for centuries afterwards, now
enlivened the atmosphere of the grey, episcopal city.
Pasted against the walls of public edifices were the
most recent placards and counter-placards of the States-General
and the States of Utrecht on the great subject of religious
schisms and popular tumults. In the shop-windows
and on the bookstalls of Contra-Remonstrant tradesmen,
now becoming more and more defiant as the last allies
of Holland, the States of Utrecht, were gradually losing
courage, were seen the freshest ballads and caricatures
against the Advocate. Here an engraving represented
him seated at table with Grotius, Hoogerbeets, and
others, discussing the National Synod, while a flap
of the picture being lifted put the head of the Duke
of Alva on the legs of Barneveld, his companions being
transformed in similar manner into Spanish priests
and cardinals assembled at the terrible Council of
Blood-with rows of Protestant martyrs burning and hanging
in the distance. Another print showed Prince
Maurice and the States-General shaking the leading
statesmen of the Commonwealth in a mighty sieve through
which came tumbling head foremost to perdition the
hated Advocate and his abettors. Another showed
the Arminians as a row of crest-fallen cocks rained
upon by the wrath of the Stadholder—Arminians
by a detestable pun being converted into “Arme
haenen” or “Poor cocks.” One
represented the Pope and King of Spain blowing thousands
of ducats out of a golden bellows into the lap of
the Advocate, who was holding up his official robes
to receive them, or whole carriage-loads of Arminians
starting off bag and baggage on the road to Rome, with
Lucifer in the perspective waiting to give them a
warm welcome in his own dominions; and so on, and
so on. Moving through the throng, with iron calque
on their heads and halberd in hand, were groups of
Waartgelders scowling fiercely at many popular demonstrations
such as they had been enlisted to suppress, but while
off duty concealing outward symptoms of wrath which
in many instances perhaps would have been far from
genuine.
For although these mercenaries knew that the States of Holland, who were responsible for the pay of the regular troops then in Utrecht, authorized them to obey no orders save from the local authorities, yet it was becoming a grave question for the Waartgelders whether their own wages were perfectly safe, a circumstance which made them susceptible to the atmosphere of Contra-Remonstrantism which was steadily enwrapping the whole country. A still graver question was whether such resistance as they could offer to the renowned Stadholder, whose name was magic to every soldier’s heart not